Charles Stark (Doc) Draper

Born in 1901, Charles Stark Draper was educated at MIT earning an S.B. in 1926,
and an Sc.D. in physics in 1938. He was appointed an assistant professor in the Department
of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT in 1935. Dr. Draper soon formed MIT's
Instrumentation Laboratory with a small group of students and technicians. His work
at MIT/IL led to the development of the Mark 14 gunsight during World War II, and after
the war, the development of inertial guidance and navigation systems for the US military -
Polaris, Poseidon, Trident I, and Trident II.

In 1961, Draper and his lab were awarded the contract for guidance and navigation for
the Apollo program, the first program contract to be awarded and under his leadership,
MIT/IL developed the highly innovative and successful AGC. Personally, Draper was
strongly in favour of the US space program, going so far as to offer his services as
navigator for the Apollo flights. In 1973, the Instrumentation Laboratory was spun off
from MIT and the new lab was named the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory. Draper died
in 1987.